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This is Money
Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has given the strongest signal yet that the US central bank is willing to slash interest rates aggressively in order to prevent the economy from heading in to a recession.
Bernanke signals he will fight off recession
The Federal Reserve will lower interest rates aggressively in the coming months to try to avert a US recession, the central bank's chairman Ben Bernanke signalled yesterday.
Bernanke signals 'substantive' cut in US interest rates
Homeowners must wait another month for a cut in interest rates after the Bank of England left the cost of borrowing on hold. The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee is widely expected to reduce its interest rate of 5.5 per cent next month, having judged that the economy will be able to withstand higher rates until February.
Bank of England holds rate cut for a month
Britons must now pay closer to £1 than 50p for one euro for the first time in history, after sterling suffered another weak day on the currency markets.
Euro breaks 75p mark against pound
Bank of America is in advanced talks to buy Countrywide in a move that should see America's largest mortgage lender avoid Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The deal will remove continued uncertainty surrounding the future of Countrywide, now synonymous with the US sub-prime mortgage crisis. Although there is no guarantee that an agreement will be reached, it is understood that if a deal is reached it will be done so very soon.
Bank of America to rescue Countrywide
Investment banks Citigroup and Merrill Lynch are in advanced discussions with a number of key regulators to pave the way for further capital injections from sovereign wealth funds. Merrill is expected to be looking for around $4bn (£2bn) from a Middle Eastern sovereign wealth fund, on top of the $5bn it received on Christmas Eve from Singapore's Temasek.
Citigroup and Merrill Lynch consult regulator on sovereign wealth funds
The London Stock Exchange plans an organised market by the end of this year in contracts for difference (CFDs), a sometimes controversial method of buying shares without paying their full price, The Times has learnt. The LSE has quietly written to market participants inviting them to a seminar at the end of this month at which it will set out its plans for a combined order book in equities and CFDs. It is thought the plan is to give reputable investors[!] a way to trade on a well-regulated market in the instruments, which are a form of equities derivative.
LSE planning to offer organised market in CFDs by end of year